SeaCrest wrote:The study that "proved" a correlation between autism and vaccines was found to be Very Bad and had no actual statistics that showed the purported connection - a lot of things were fudged, and the sample size of the study was laughable. The doctor who conducted the study and published the results actually had his license revoked because of the false claims he made.
The other argument I've heard is that vaccines apparently use stem cells from aborted fetuses. To counter that, there are other sources of stem cells, but because they're there, the aborted fetuses are often the quickest source. This argument overlaps with the whole abortion debate, so that's all I'll say here.
Personally, vaccines are Very Important and should not be sacrificed even for religious reasons. I know that it's probably a bit of an extreme stance, but vaccines are important because herd immunity is what helps to protect individuals who can't be vaccinated for whatever reason - infants, people with autoimmune diseases, etc. Even if they themselves aren't vaccinated, the fact that most people around them are means that they're protected by virtue of the fact that nobody else can get the disease and pass it on to them. As with all things, it's not 100% perfect, but it's a damn sight better than leaving it up to chance.
Children have been dying of smallpox since last year, and there was a measles outbreak in late 2015 if I remember correctly. These diseases were eradicated because of vaccines; by not vaccinating your kids, you're risking the health and safety of everyone.
You have summed up my feelings right there, and written much better then I could have.
I have religious friends who have decided against vaccinating their children. It makes me sad to think that the information they quote to me is so biased. I just hope they don't convince my brother not to vaccinate their new baby.